New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 15, 1930, Page 6

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6 - New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY New Britain, Conecticut Issued Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg., 67 Cburch Btreet r i SUBSCRIPTION RATES $3.09 & Year $3.00 Thres Month 60 a Month Batersd at the Post Office at New Britain a0 Second Clam Mall Matter, TELEPHONE CALLS Business Ofmce . 926 Editorial Rooms .... 926 The only profitable advertising mediam tn the City. Circulation books and press room always open to advertisers Member of the Associated Press The Amociated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for re-publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited fn this peper and also local sews published therein. Member Audlt Bureaa of Clrculation The A. B. C. is & national organization which furnishes newspapers and adver- tisers with & strictly honest analysis of cireulation. Our circulation statisti Based upon this audit. This insures p: tection against fraud In newspaper d tribution figures to both pational and | local advertisera. | The Herald fs on sale dally in New York at Hotaling's Newsstand, Times | Square; Bchults's Newsstand, Entrance | Grand Central, 4ind Btreet. | | Dean Wilbur L. Cross admits he got his early political educati the feet of farmers who discusse politics in Mansfield. the general store "What has become of the g stores and the farmers who whittled and chewed tobacco while they dis- cussed politics? | eral Nowadays we have a tilling station and an automobile re- gasoline pair shop taking its place at the widening in the road. Farmers don't | meet there hours at a time because | they are too busy consuming the main product sold there. Incidentally, they don't take as | much interest in politics as they | used to, having delegated their | powers to the organization nh:th: can run the state without their ver- | bal assistance. | I The first race between the Enter- | prise and the Shamrock V did not | prove much, say the experts, except | that the American yacht won and | was handled better. | That is enough for one race. B further comment is reserved be- cause there will be other races, and | it is & wise man who knows when to | restrain a tendency to make com- parisons before the races are defi- nitely over. Dieudonne Coste and Bellonte are in Hartford today on a good will tour. Maurice ‘Good will is like everything else that is good. There cannot be too much of it. The grandoldparty of the state opens its convention in Hartford to- day. Somebody may be excited about it, but if so, he is very lonely. To the best of everybody's knowl- edge nothing will happen except that the entire ticket as already se- lected by the big boys will be put through iwithout hitch or friction. Mr. Levitt's three delegates may | do some talking and thew a few | monkey wrenches. But outside of | that it will be a quiet little political party. chiet natioral | Anti-Saloon | F. Scott McBride, functionary in the League, says he is strongly opposcd to prohibition referendums. There must be a reason for this. The rea- son is 50 easy to guess that nobody has set up a prize for the successtul | Fuessers. One of the practical achieved by miniature golt courses is that they have stimu boys in manufacturing little golf courses in back The job takes lots keeps their their minds and faculties well occu- re ted small | their own ards of time, hours the streets, pied outside of school keeps them off an More evidence that changing for the better in the fact that Wall Stre inclined to look into the future i stead of contemplating the past. times indicated is more BAD NEWS FROM GERMANY Amazing zai the ext parties in the German zeneral elec- tion held yesterday, and particulas the astonishing growth of the Na- tlonal Socialists. or Fascists are not of a character to enli: ternational confidence, The Fascists, v Germany Pa ho favor ship in on model, ninth the Re move from in place party strength second plice, being by the Social Democrat As the under the leads Adolf Hitler. e treaties surpassed favor a their republic is ings elsewners, <ely to provide misgiv- The fall of the Bruening cabinel is regarded as certain in the face of these election returns. The German election turned largely upon problems incidental with Germany’, internal financial situation, in which new and onerous methods of taxation, increasing un- employment and the unemployment insurance system loomed as large items. As is customary, the govern- ment was blamed for everything that did not meet with popular ap- | | proval. APPEALING TO RACE PREJUDICE Mayor James M. Curley of Bos- ton the other day made quite a thrilling public address; and among other things he appealed to citizens Trish Boston to re- pudiate the candidacy of Joseph B. who secks the Democratic gub- of descent in ernatorial nomination. The Boston mayor did no service | the citizens of Irish descent in | by thus brazenly injecting question into Massachusetts 1t therefore, t Boston Democrats, including voters of Irish have let it be known oppose such to Boston the race to gratifying note, a large number of politics. they strongly tact y has been of the im- “owns the Irish vote” in | some | inclined to resent the | R THE NEEDY, N INCLUDED | LOOKING AFT BUT WOME idge Saxe the other d on to give a decision regarding | woman with three children, who | had been deserted by the bread-win- | ner of | The that the only | reason of | the home was due to the fact the woman had no means of support. | d not find employment, and | Il children to look after probably would have to ect them had she obtained em- | the fam found for evidence judge poverty in She cou! with ployment far too many. This and the au- | 1ch fairly large ¢ cases are is a | thorities do not get into touch with | volume of the such needy cases. E If the law gets hold of the de- serting husband he be duly | punished. But that aids the suffer- | ing family not one whit. |‘ Through the schools, the city | gives encouragement to children In | obtaining the rudiments of an edu- cation. More is needed. Children, innocent of wrong and the \'\(‘tims‘ of man-made circumstances, should after in other | all will be properly looked respects. And desert too— necd more aid than merely be- d wives—and widows, ing given the opportunity to work at | some job to eke out an existence and | ¢ neglect their tots. | THE TIME ELEMENT | William J. Pape, Waterbury pub- | says the Levitt-Pape in- surgency outbreak did not begin | functioning in 169 but ondy in“five of them; and in two of the five it won at the caucuses. He con- | cludes that a good start has been | lisher, towns, made. Two out of five is a good ratio for a beginning. In time the remainder | of the 164 towns may be infiltrated the 1nsu virus, but how long it will take at the present speed | vitt-Pape movement Life is short. More speed is neces- | ary in converting insurgency senti- ment into action if resulis are to be | acheved in this generation. ACING THE MONUMENT low species rticularly o[! hoodlumism evidenced itself at the | rial mo! This. ¢ : defacing the | | Academy. had oc- | " pints and quarts of fruit during the present season. Give her a hand. A “HORRIBLE EXAMPLE" What happens when a town has lack of foresight and doesn't look after its water supply is forcefully illustrated by the plight of Annapo- lis, Md. The city has three reservoirs, and they are no larger than they were years ago. No effort was ever made to insue a larger supply of water for a larger city. To have done 8o would have cost money, and there have always been keen students of political economy in Annapolis; and also persons who looked with ex- treme disfavor upon any plan for an increased water supply that would increase the tax rate. Dispatches from Annapolis have been frequent of late, and they have been telling of a dwindling water supply. The point now has been reached where motor trucks have been engaged to haul drinking water from wells for the use of public school children. Residents have been resorting to the use of water from Uncle Sam's Naval Academy:and private wells. It is lucky the town has the Naval Navy officials have con- sented to aid in the emergency by permitting pipe line connections th the Academy's supply. A city has wi fire engine becn pumping water from a stream into | one of the city's reservoirs and has not halted for more than a month. After this sorry business is over, the taxpayers of Annapolis will be nimously of spending ¢ to 1nsure a bigger and better | in favor mo water supply RELIGIOUS BODIES IN UNITED STATES Religio groups in the United States form bulwark for good morals and sound living. There may disagreement respecting the tenets of the 212 separate religious groups in the United States, but| there can be little disagreement re- uplift s a be garding their tendencies to and idealize human relations. Consequently the second and final federal census of religious bodies, taken in 1926, and just off the press, is an eve-opening | volume, There are facts in it which pro- | voke thought, if not satistaction. The nation is not ungodly, nor has it lost its grip upon the things of the spirit. Here are some of the facts: The 212 separate denominations in the United States support 232,000 churches, which “may be compared with 255,000 public school buildings. Children in the Sunday schools, excluding parochial and undenom- 25 inational religious schools, is only 15 per cent less than the total number of children in the public elementary and high schools. The annual church expenditures $517,000,000 are almost half as large as the annual expenditves upon the public schools of the land. Fifty-fiye of 100 persons over 12 years of age are members rural districts of every of churches—52 in and 58 in urban. Of every 100 females over the lage of 12, 62 are church members, of every 100 compared with 48 males. In the United States, 62 of 100 chu members are Protestants, and 38 are Catholics, Jews or other non-Protestants In the rural districts, 93 of every every | 100 churches are Protestant Eleven states have mors than 90 | per cent Protestant church member- ship, all of these being below the Mason and Dixon line. The complete figures of the census are equally illuminating. The total nent in Walnut Hill | number of church members in the jcooler Tuesday and in rs to the | United States is given at 54,576,346, ' northwest portioni tonight; increas- | The most numerous denominations | are the following, in round numbers: Chief of Police Hart has stated | gangste r; But inordinate num- and badly and young esence felt e ol , which contains an of rack is creditable. the city ber brought of irr up Y who mak ponsibl ungsters their pub | men, 1t almost gathering. One of their pet methods of pa private cing time is to destroy property and publ The def monument ng of ase of the | a n point CANNING DAYS | wite who old-fashioned house ¢ stores or delicatessen shops ade ir upon the d And of | years fruit that is “canned” in can pretty glass containers likewise has some continue to their ow ad general and heap have sufficie to the extra old-fashioned innumerable | Members 18,605,000 8,440,000 5,070,000 Roman Catholic Baptists Methodists Jews (All in com- munities having synagogues) Lutherans Presbyterians iscopalians Disciples . Congregationalists Reformed Latter Da (Mormons) Christian Scientists Unitarian and Universali Friends (Quakers) Salvation Army and Volunteers 0.33 In ana of religious bodies. one o following com- rver begs leave to make the ments: (1) The | membership in churches, number of adher percentages | those denomin: \erents ed wi ch, those deno nations adherents do take out tual church membership. (2) The were obtained from ministers other chure offi and in s inevitably r mere xaggerations, 3) Un- nding of “membership” varies in different denominations. t includes only to the church | who have been haptiz e admitted into e f adults; in others, al rvi 1t only spasricdically It ed that th for actual not total Hence the large for which ad- e afili which e und ions in to Beco and 1 - e prone ( in others, th. infants attend o who be must conf | need. | the best minds don’t try to cure by | means of the tariff. | they pick cotton instead of Per Cent | adults who | 10r other- | points leave some features of the statistics in doubt for comparative purposes. But on the whole they in- dicate a wide diffusion of religious tenets throughout the population; perhaps a much larger diffusion than many critics of the churches have thought. Facts and Fancies By Robert Quillen The age of discretion is the age at which you discover that the righteous aren't all on the same side. Being a great man imposes a fearful strain. It's so hard to decide what policy will insure a second term. \ Preparirg for winter weather will be difficult for the ladies this time. There isn't much more they can take off, ‘When a man is making $50 a week and wasting $30 of it, he feels rich. When he makes only $30 and saves $10, he feels poor. . Government! It protects people from a glass of beer, but affords no protection from the water in stocks. ‘What a funny A pat on the back makes one do his best, all right, if it's done with a hair brush at the age of ten. “The sticks” is a region where a man can he polite without arousing the suspicion that he is after some- thing. No wonder there is more crime in America than elsewhere. There are more cars to provide a get-away. Hard times are those when peo- ple feel impoverished because they aren't buying things they don't Americanism: Expecting the bush-league player to show less class than a big-leaguer; expecting all children to make the same grades. All of us gladly accept the advice of our moral superiors. The diffi- culty is to find any. As a last desperate effort to get everybody a little spending money, the Government might arrange for primary elections once a month. | Another trouble in America is the fact that people who are blind and don't know it persist in leading the way. A specialist is a doctor whose wife will notice the difference when he's dead and gone. A free land is one in which the Government thinks Russia a men- ace and private citizens sell her ma- chinery to make the menace great- er. “Jake” paralysis is tragic, but it's a comfort to see something that If education is worth so much, why is it that those who need a manager. are the only ones who can make $100,000 in one evening? You see, it isn’'t wrong to bring in cheap Mexican laborers because taking jobs from union men. Correct this sentence: “I some- times get a case postponed because I'm not ready for trial,” said the lawyer, “but I never do it in an ef- tort to cheat justice.” Copyright, 1930, Publishers Syndicate | Observations ‘ On The Weather | Washington, Sept. 15.—Forecast | |for Southern New England: Show- | ers tonight, not much change in temperature; moderate southwest| winds. | Forecast for Eastern New York: Showers and thunder storms to- night and Tuesday; somewhat extreme | |ing southerly and probably day. Forecast for New Haven and | vicinity: Generally cloudy weather with local showers tonight and | Tuesday: slightly cooler Tuesday. | Conditions: Pressure is high| |over the Atlantic ocean. A trough| of low pressure extends southward | from White River to Memphis and | thence southwestward to San An- tonio. Showers and thunder storms | |occurred over the Mississippi and | Ohio valleys, the Lake region and | portions of New England. Tem- peratures are rising in northeastern districts. | | Conditions favor for this vicinity | | unsettled weather with fog and | light showers. Temperatures yesterday winds becoming fresh | hifting to west Tues- | Low Atlanta n | Atlantic City .... 2 | Boston Buffalo Chicago | Cincinnati | Denver ;nu]uth Hatteras | Los Angeles Miami . | Minneapolis . Nantucket Nashville ew Haven ew Orleans ., New York Norfolk, Va Northfield, Pittshurgh Portland St. Louis Washington | Y | Mississippi spent more than $3.- | 600,000 last year improving elemen- [ tary and high school buildings L1} 66 43 44 6 | 60 | 82| 82| 64 86 0 80 [ 62 vt Me. Alpine county, Calif |2rea of 776 square miles. has a pon- | ulation of only 239. a density of one I person to 3.2 square miles, with a land | | Ject other stories of India. Tristram was | solicitations about QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 1322 New York avenue, Washing- ton, D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can extcnded research be under- taken. All other questions will re- ceive a personal reply. Unsigned re- quests cannot be answered. All let- ters are confidential.—Editor. Q. How long would it take to count a million, and a billion? A. Allowing sixty counts to a minute and eight hours to the day, iz would take about 34.72 days to count a million, and 34,720 davs to count a billion. Q. What is the technical defini- tion of color? A. It is that quality of an ob- by which it emits, reflects, or transmits certain rays of light and absorbs ohers, thus producing a specific effect on the eye, depend- ing upon the nature of the rays reaching the nervous clements of the retina, the immediated stimulus of which is photochemical Q. What is the height above the river of Brooklyn Bridge, at the center? A. About 135 feet. Q. What are the duties executrix of an estate? A. To carry out the provisions of a will and manage and distribute the estate subject to review and ap- proval by the court. Q. How many negro are there in Congress? A. Only one, Oscar De Priest, Republican, from Chicago, Tl Q. In what books of fiction are the characters of Desdemona, D'Artagnan, Mulvaney and Tris- tram? A, Desdemona was the ot Shakespeare's “Othello;” D'Ar- tagnan the hero of the “Three Musketeers,” by Alexandre Dumas fulvaney is the witty I soldier ir. Kipling's “Soldiers Three,” and of an members heroine | the son of Sir Meliadus, King of Lyonesse. He was called Tristram (sorrowful) because his mother died | at his birth. He was used by Alfred | Tennyson in “Idylls of the King." | Q. Where is Khyber Pass? | A. In Afghanistan. It is the prin- cipal northern pass into that coun- try from India, commencing 10 miles west of Peshawar and ex- tending 30 miles northwest to the plain of Jelalabad. Q. How much does a dollars in gold weigh? A. It weighs 0 pounds. Q. When did the government of the United States begin to money? million | stay-outs! coin | skaters execute A. In 1703 Q. Do chickens have teeth? A. No. Q. What is the address headquarters of the known as the Disabled American Veterans of the World War? A. The address is avenue, Walnut Hills, Ohio. i | Q. Which cities in the l'm!od; States have the largest pumber negroes? of Cincinnati, A. The 1920 census enumerated [ moat are flocks of ducks quacking | for New York city. 467; Phila- delphia, 134,229; and \vasnmgmn.( D. C.. 109,660. The 1930 census fig- ures have not vet been compiled. Q. What were the names of the two female characters who appear- | ed in “Salute?” What parts they take? A. They were Helen Chandler who played the role of Nancy Wayne, and Joyce Compton played the part of Marion Wilson. Q. What is the population the world? A It is 000,000. Q. According to the 1930 census does Milwaukes, Wisconsin, have a larger population than Pittsburgh, Pa.? A. Milvaukee has a population of 572,324 and Pittsburgh has 660,- estimated at 1,006,; 1631, Q. In what opera is the “Indian Love Call?” A. The musical Marie.” Q. Where is the Danzig? A. It comprises an area of 754 square miles, situated on the Bal- tic Sea, wtih the Polish corridor to the west, Poland to the south, and East Prussia, of which it was for- merly a part, to the east. Q. Wahat is the name of the lake that forms part of the boundary be- tween Peru and Bolivia®? A. Lake Titicaca. 25 Y e—a_rs Ago—'Today The St. Mary's Temperance ety celebrated last evening. by Thomas J. Crowe. The New Britain Business Men's association will attend the Berlin fair on Wednesday. The members plan to g0 in a body It has been decided to make town for the henefit of the high school football team. At a mass meeting held Jast eve- ning, $3000 was raised for the bene- fit of the Swedish Lutheran church. Fully 2000 people marched in the parade last evening in honor of ths ofticial visit of Archbishop to this city. The arrangements for his visit were made by Rev. L comedy ‘“Rose Free City of soci- its third anniversary Speeches were made Smith and James | nowski. At a meeting of the Funeral Di- 17‘\‘("0|‘<‘ association held yesterday M. J. Kenney of this city was chos- en as a delegate to the national con- vention to be held in Niagara Falls next month. The enrollment in the public schools is 4,833, a gain of 400 pu- pils over last year. Symon Boj- | | volunteers from | surprising how many |are not the |everybod organization |air a few moments, suddenly of | floor is reached did | assure you | morning. who | prospects with that.” We did of | writer every | | | | | | | {a vear they hold a dinner at wt Dean Cross Amused by Comments on His Age New Haven, Sept. 15 (UP)— Dean Wilbur L. Cross, democratic nominee for governor, discussed his age—which is 68—in his first campaign speech. “I have to go no farther than the papers to find descriptions of myself,” he told 1200 democrats at an outing sponsored by the 10th senatorial district Demo- 15.—Diary of a| modern Pepys: Came an amusing | note from Frederic Burr Opper, grand old conquistador of the car- toons, and to breakfast with Belle- fontaine's pride Howard Acton and amusing him so recalling days we were cubs together he had a lapse of memory and signed the chit For a promenade and talked to Jimmy Elliott and saw a man wide- 1y whispered to have pistoled Ar- nold Rothstein but roaming at large, smiling, debonair! To my task but the typewriter stuck and 1 had a time tinkering with it, " treasuring such excuses not to work To dinner on the St. Regis roof and among others saw the Grant- land Rices, the Keats Speeds, Re- | gina Wallace and a Biddle—the one with the minstrel collar, So driving in the magic gold and cool of the park and home reading aloud to my wife from a racey life of Balzac. New York, Sept It just gave me a start to rl?(‘fl”‘ my memory of New York goes clear | back to the days when the Grand | Concourse was not torn up. | More than 100 prominent gentle- men in New York have overcome | stammering in earious ways. Once | ch | leng and fluent specches are made. I hear once an impediment is mas- tered it never troubles again. Some of the most charming people Il know stutter. ] A paragrapher anxious about Senator Heflin inquires: “What has become of the old Tom Show?" J All of whica is remindful that 10| Tom Thumb golf courses a week are still springing up around New York. The heavy play from midnight until | daylight has provided philanderers | with a dandy excuse, too, the dirty Personal nomination for the grandest soda in towm—the choco late at Allegretti's in the Astor. The Hudson River Bridge, the longest single span in the world nearing completion on upper River- | side, gleams at night with electric | warnings for airplanes. You wouldn't think cable stretching could possibly be so exciting but I run up every week for a look. Also to see the batch of cute red heads in the little soft drink stand next | door. | One of the road house cabarets along Pelham offers a side-splitting diversion, at least for me. A pair of dizzy whirls and The male skater calls for the diners. It is respond who plants’—a little “ham” in | ! He swings them in the| puts them on their feet and skates away. aerials. | And Leon Erroll in his limpest days 2840° Melrose | never' stumbled into such hilarious gutta-percha falls. cabaret the by arched tridges spanning a moat. In At the same dance | foot | !he} Like everything and what won't they | think up next? It does beat all. I am on the prospect list school for wrtiers. Flowery lary pleas beseech me to enroll. said a form letter this hat after eight months vou can be assured of 350 a Contrast your present job and and leap over the desk from the type- whipstitch to do a jig. of a study 133 The cost of tumble. Fifth living continues its avenue florists are | | Detailed by Li fas | o v Lieutenant Matthias U | street, cratic club Sunday. “The repub- lican papers refer to me as an ‘elderly gentleman.' The demo- cratic papers say that I look about half my age and that I have a florid complexion.” A man’'s age, said the dean, “depends on his habits.” A man\ who is “dry” in his personal ha- bits will live longer than a man who is ““dripping wet” in his per- sonal habits, he asserted. Cross does not drink, although he is opposed to federal prohibi- tion. selling two 85 orchids for $6. Im- | agine how much that will mean in a | year! A computation Just arri\'ing: shows my vearly writing output ex- | ceeds 500,000 words and I can yawn | just thinking of it. (Smart cracks | filed in order received.) | Then there is the Portland. Ore.|jearneq from William Rogers of that gentleman who writes: I 8uPPOSe|,jqress that Dr. R. G. Benoit and sou use the initials O. O. because | ppijiy Mayer of 221 Pleasant street only two zeroes could express the hadq come to claim some articles nothingness of vour stuff.” | which Mayer faid he had left be- Just let me sit here. I'll be all | hind when he moved out of Rogers' right in a minute, | nouse last week. (Copyright, 1930, McNaught | Joseph Rogers, father of William Syndicate, Inc.) | Rogers, asked them why they had not turned in the key to the tene- ment and demanded to know what | the purpose of their visit was. Then he started to eject Dr. Benoit and Mayer and Dr. Benoit resisted. In tha scuffle, Dr. Benoit scratched Rogers about the neck, face and arm, and William Rogers insisted that Officer Muszynski arrest him for assault The officer brought Dr. Benoit to the police station but Prosecuting Attor- ney J. G. Woods found no cause for prosecution and the case was not brought into court. Spark From Stove Fire Starts Blaze in House | When Mrs. Anthony Mankus of | 360 Burritt street cooked her Sun- day dinner yesterday she had her husband bring to the kitchen plenty | of kindling wood and newspapers, and these he placed behind ths | range, between the range and the | kitchen wall. When the fire was started, Mrs. Mankus left the chim- ney draft open and a spark went through an opening and landed in | the pile of papers. Shortly after, flames and smoke appeared, and an alarm was sounded from Box 36 at North Burritt and Alden streets. Engine Co. No. 6 respohded at 1:38, extinguished the flames and returned at 1:56. The damage to | the woodwork in the kitchen was | between $30 and $50. Policeman Ends Fight In Pleasant St. House A large Grecian urn, designed and made by prisoners, has been erected at the Ohio state peniten. tiary as a monument to 320 cone | viets who died in the Easter Mon. day prison riot ard fire. M ONTREAL ION to investigate a complaint that there P vas a disturbance at 217 Pléasant | Officer Edward Muszynski | Round $10 FRIDAY Sept. 19 . Stamford v. So. Norwalk . Bridgeport 5 Haven + Mexiden Waterbury Dristol . Britain . Maritord Montreal Trip he Beacon Recommends: “24 HOURS” By Louis Bromfield Last Week's Recommendation ‘Angel Pavement’ 85 WEST MAIN ST. PRRRNEINSY Returning SUNDAY, September Ly, Montreal ..... 5 ) TICKETS NOW! Limited number of Tickets good only tation Ticket Offices. Excursionists should carry identifi- cation papers and evidence of T. §. citizenship for presentation fo immi. gration officers on re-entry to U. S. The NEW HAVEN R. R. —_— SAUCE FOR THE GOOSE— May be sauce for the garder, too. but Fauce for the fish won't do for the vegetables; and sauce for the meat doesn't go for the dessert Our Washington Bureau has ready for You a comprehensive bulletin on SAUCES for every use—desserts, fish, meats and vegetables. It will make a valuable addition to your collection of recipes. Fill out the coupon below and send for it: = == = = — =(LIP COUPON HERE == == e e ) COOKERY EDITOR. Washington Bureau, New Britain Herald, 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D. T want a copy of the bulletin SAUCES. and enclose herewith five cents in coin, ge stampe, to cover return postage and handling costs STREET AND K UMBEP. GITTENE . I am - reader of the New Britain Herald. _J e e e e e e s e e ey Toonerville Folks By Fontaine Fox FLEM PRODDY, THE LOCAL INVENTOR,WAS THROWN OUT OF THE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE MEETING LAST TUESDAY. TOONERVILLE NVITES YOU TO LOCATE YOUR PLANT IN THIS GROWING cary - (0120 - 1TUTT BOO 00 TelzSYT Z o “tz ycoo0

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